PhD Thesis Defense
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Goal-Expressive Movement for Social Navigation: Where and When to Behave Legibly

NSH 3305

Abstract: Robots often need to communicate their navigation goals to assist observers in anticipating the robot's future actions. Enabling observers to infer where a robot is going from its movements is particularly important as robots begin to share workplaces, sidewalks, and social spaces with humans. We can use legible motion, or movements that use intentional [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Eye Gaze for Intelligent Driving

NSH 4305

Abstract:  Intelligent vehicles have been proposed as one path to increasing traffic safety and reducing on-road crashes. Driving “intelligence” today takes many forms, ranging from simple blind spot occupancy or forward collision warnings to distance-aware cruise and all the way to full driving autonomy in certain situations. Primarily, these methods are outward-facing and operate on [...]

Faculty Events
Research Professor
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

AI-CARING

Newell-Simon Hall 4305

AI-CARING is an NSF-sponsored institute, led by Georgia Tech, whose mission is to investigate, develop and evaluate AI technologies to help older adults live independently.  The Institute focuses on providing reminders to the older adults and alerting caregivers when necessary, assisting older adults with tasks such as meal preparation, motivating them to exercise, providing conversational [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Learning to Perceive and Predict Everyday Interactions

NSH 1305

Abstract:  This thesis aims to build computer systems to understand everyday hand-object interactions in the physical world – both perceiving ongoing interactions in 3D space and predicting possible interactions. This ability is crucial for applications such as virtual reality, robotic manipulations, and augmented reality. The problem is inherently ill-posed due to the challenges of one-to-many [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Sensorized Soft Material Systems with Integrated Electronics and Computing

NSH 1305

Abstract: The integration of soft and multifunctional materials in emerging technologies is becoming more widespread due to their ability to enhance or improve functionality in ways not possible using typical rigid alternatives. This trend is evident in various fields. For example, wearable technologies are increasingly designed using soft materials to improve modulus compatibility with biological [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Deep Learning for Tactile Sensing: Development to Deployment

NSH 1305

Abstract: The role of sensing is widely acknowledged for robots interacting with the physical environment. However, few contemporary sensors have gained widespread use among roboticists. This thesis proposes a framework for incorporating sensors into a robot learning paradigm, from development to deployment, through the lens of ReSkin -- a versatile and scalable magnetic tactile sensor. [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Learning and Translating Temporal Abstractions of Behaviour across Humans and Robots

NSH 4305

Abstract: Humans are remarkably adept at learning to perform tasks by imitating other people demonstrating these tasks. Key to this is our ability to reason abstractly about the high-level strategy of the task at hand (such as the recipe of cooking a dish) and the behaviours needed to solve this task (such as the behaviour [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Towards Underwater 3D Visual Perception

Abstract: With modern robotic technologies, seafloor imageries have become more accessible to both researchers and the public. This thesis leverages deep learning and 3D vision techniques to deliver valuable information from seafloor image observations. Despite the widespread use of deep learning and 3D vision algorithms across various fields, underwater imaging presents unique challenges, such as [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
Extern
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Assistive value alignment using in-situ naturalistic human behaviors

NSH 3305

Abstract: As collaborative robots are increasingly deployed in personal environments, such as the home, it is critical they take actions to complete tasks consistent with personal preferences. Determining personal preferences for completing household chores, however, is challenging. Many household chores, such as setting a table or loading a dishwasher, are sequential and open-vocabulary, creating a [...]

Special Events

Ice Cream Social

RoboLounge and NSH Patio

Join RISO at the Ice Cream Social robolounge @5-7 Wednesday September 4th Free Entry

Seminar
Carnegie Mellon Graphics Colloquium - Ravi Ramamoorthi
Ronald L. Graham Professor of Computer Science Director
University of California, San Diego

Sampling and Signal-Processing for High-Dimensional Visual Appearance in Computer Graphics and Vision

Rashid Auditorium - 4401 Gates and Hillman Centers

Abstract: Many problems in computer graphics and vision, such as acquiring images of a scene to enable synthesis of novel views from many directions for virtual reality, computing realistic images by integrating lighting from many different incident directions across a range of scene pixels and viewing angles, or acquiring and modeling the appearance of realistic materials [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Teaching Robots to Drive: Scalable Policy Improvement via Human Feedback

NSH 3305

Abstract: A long-standing problem in autonomous driving is grappling with the long-tail of rare scenarios for which little or no data is available. Although learning-based methods scale with data, it is unclear that simply ramping up data collection will eventually make this problem go away. Approaches which rely on simulation or world modeling offer some [...]